Western Mail

Sleep loss linked to mood episodes in people with bipolar disorder

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SLEEP loss can trigger relapse, particular­ly in the form of mania, in people with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder, a study by Cardiff University has found.

The new research, led by Cardiff University PhD student Katie Lewis from the National Centre for Mental Health (NCMH), suggests that one in four people with bipolar disorder may be at risk of an episode of high mood following sleep loss.

Understand­ing what factors influence the relationsh­ip between sleep and mood episodes could help predict which individual­s are most likely to relapse following periods of sleep deprivatio­n, for example, because of long-haul travel or shift work.

It could also inform self-management techniques such as e-monitoring.

This is the largest study to date reporting on the prevalence of sleep loss as a trigger in individual­s with bipolar disorder and the first study to examine sleep loss as a trigger of both manic and depressive episodes in a large sample of individual­s with bipolar disorder.

The large sample size made it possible for the team to examine whether bipolar subtype (type 1 or type 2), as well as gender, could affect people’s vulnerabil­ity to sleep loss.

Type 1 and type 2 bipolar subtypes can both represent serious mental health conditions, however the main difference between type 1 and type 2 bipolar disorder is that people with type 1 tend to have more severe episodes of high mood, possibly requiring hospitalis­ation.

Katie Lewis, from Cardiff University, who led the research, explained: “We found that 20% of people with bipolar disorder reported that sleep loss had triggered episodes of high mood, whereas 12% reported that sleep loss had triggered episodes of low mood.

“A tendency for sleep loss to trigger episodes of high mood was more likely among women and people with type 1 bipolar disorder.

“This finding was the same when controllin­g for things like the number of episodes experience­d, age and illness severity. In contrast, the tendency for sleep loss to trigger depression appeared to be the same across bipolar subtypes and genders.”

In the study, Katie and her colleagues interviewe­d 3,140 individual­s, drawn as a sample from the Bipolar Disorder Research Network.

People were recruited from across the UK, through NHS community mental health teams and patient support organisati­ons such as Bipolar UK.

It is unclear why some individual­s become depressed following sleep deprivatio­n and others become manic.

It is possible that other triggers associated with relapse in bipolar disorder, such as stressful or exciting life events, medication use or interperso­nal conflict, may coincide with the sleep loss that people experience.

Katie concluded: “Future research could potentiall­y look at the role genes play in determinin­g which people are particular­ly vulnerable to sleep loss triggering episodes of illness.”

The study – Sleep Loss as a Trigger of Mood Episodes in Bipolar Disorder: Individual Difference­s Based on Diagnostic Subtype and Gender – is published in the British Journal of Psychiatry.

The team at the National Centre for Mental Health are currently taking this work further by directly measuring sleep using activity monitors, and are keen to hear from anyone with bipolar disorder who would like to help with the research.

For more informatio­n, see www.ncmh.info/sleep-bipolardis­order/

 ??  ?? > New research found a tendency for sleep loss to trigger episodes of high mood was more likely among women and people with type 1 bipolar disorder
> New research found a tendency for sleep loss to trigger episodes of high mood was more likely among women and people with type 1 bipolar disorder

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